THE ORIENTAL INSTITUTE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO
ASSYRIOLOGICAL STUDIES • NO. 19
THE AKKADIAN INFLUENCES
ON ARAMAIC
By
STEPHEN A. KAUFMAN
THE ORIENTAL INSTITUTE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO
ASSYRIOLOGICAL STUDIES • NO. 19
THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS • CHICAGO AND LONDON
International Standard Book Number: 0-226-62281-9 Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 74-16674
The University of Chicago Press, Chicago 60637 The University of Chicago Press, Ltd., London
© 1974 rfy the University of Chicago. All rights reserved. Published 1974. Printed in the United States of America.
In Memory of Eduard Yechezkel Kutscher
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This book represents a substantial revision of my doctoral dissertation presented to the faculty of the Graduate School of Yale University in candidacy for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in 1970. Its subject was suggested by Professor Franz Rosenthal, who also served as my major advisor. Other readers, all of whom gave freely of their time and valuable counsel, were professors J. J. Finkelstein, W. W. Hallo, and Marvin H. Pope. I take this opportunity to offer them once again my appreciation and gratitude and to express the hope that this study does no disservice to the consistently high quality of their instruction and scholarship.
The decision to prepare this work for publication, and to do so as soon as possible, was taken at the urging of many teachers and colleagues, chief among them the late Professor E.Y. Kutscher. His enthusiasm and assurances as the quality of its contents far outweighed my own dissatisfactions with its less than ideal dissertation style. During my year in Jerusalem and later, during his last trip to America, we discussed together almost every substantive issue treated herein, often disagreeing, to be sure. It is with deep sadness and sincere gratitude that I dedicate this book to the memory of this great scholar, teacher, and friend.
I am grateful to Yale University, whose Sterling Fellowship enabled me to devote full time to the researching of the material collected herein, and to the Hebrew University, for granting me the Warburg Prize and a post-doctoral fellowship which allowed me to spend a year in Jerusalem doing additional research.
Chicago April 1974
Stephen A. Kaufman
CONTENTS
ABBREVIATIONS xi INTRODUCTION 1 I. PRELIMINARY CONSIDERATIONS 5
Goals of This Study The Nature of Language Contact The Evidence for Borrowing The Problems of Akkadian—West Semitic Contact Early Akkadian Loans in West Semitic
II. THE LEXICAL INFLUENCES 30 Lexical List Month Names
III. THE NON-LEXICAL INFLUENCES 116 Phonology
Spirantization of Postvocalic Stops The Loss of Laryngeals Nasalization Dissimilation of Emphatics
/ Morphology Shaphel The Imperfect Prefix l/n The Loss of the w-bearing Pronominal Suffixes The Plural Determined Suffix -e The Infinitive of the Derived Conjugations The Plural Ending -tin (in) The Imperial Aramaic Passive
Syntax The Genitive Construction Word Order The Eastern Aramaic System of States The Use of kt The Interrogative Particle mt
IV. ANALYSIS AND CONCLUSIONS 137 Phonology
Stops Labials Dentals Velars
Sibilants
i x
x / Contents
Glottal Stop and h Nasals Liquids Final Feminine -t Vowels and Length Spirantization
The Development of the Aramaic Dialects Old Aramaic Mesopotamian Aramaic Imperial Aramaic Monumental Dialects Jewish Aramaic
The Targums Babylonian Talmudic
Mandaic Syriac
A Quantitative Analysis of the Lexical Data BIBLIOGRAPHY 171 INDEX OF NORTH WEST SEMITIC WORDS 187